Select a bureaucracy with which you are familiar and analyze the extent to which it is accurately described by Weber's six-point ideal-type model. How would you account for any variations you may have identified?

Divorce
If this was your client, what would you say and do? Be specific. Why would respond that way?
What are your personal values on this ethical issue?
Relate the ethical principles of autonomy, nonmaleficence, beneficence, and fidelity to this case.
Doing it my way
If this was your client, what would you say a

The outlawing of slavery and extending voting rights to women seem to indicate that ethics can have beneficial results. Give an example from the past that indicates a similar result or a current social policy that might be regarded as wrong, which therefore needs to be changed. Give your reasons and indicate which ethical theory

Imagine your boss has decided that all phone calls, e-mails, and other communications will be recorded and monitored. What assumptions is the boss making about the employees? Is such monitoring justified morally? Is it a good idea as a management tool?

Pick one of your favorite childhood stories and explain how the story shows examples of conceptions (ecological knowledge), connections (solidarity of community ties), and contestations (political strategy).

How to Identified several ways of seeking knowledge and truth; Please clearly explained.
How a biblical christian worldview and different methods of knowing are compatible and why discussed from a biblical christian worldview.
What aspects of human nature influence in seeking knowledge and truth?

Why does social inequality emerge in society in the first place and why does it continue to persist once it is established.
Read the chapter on inequality in Joel Charon's book Ten Questions. The excerpt starts on p. 75 and can be found at:
http://books.google.com/books?id=40DdUTZEeH8C&pg=PA76&lpg=PA76&dq=charon+%22why+do

1. You can look at sports from several theoretical perspectives including conflict, functionalist, interactionist, and feminist. Which of these is most useful in looking at the sociology of sports? Why?
2. Why do so many people participate in sports, either as fans, players, or as a business?
3. What do sports answer in

Why is the idea of exclusive private clubs so controversial and generate so much ill-will? Before you answer with the knee-jerk response "they're just jealous," consider how envy arises in society, the difference between envy and jealousy, and its uses in the class system.

We live in a consumer culture, saturated with mass media images. Much of our physical and informational space is for sale - billboards, TV, magazines, newspapers, even the area behind home plate - all of these spaces pitch products promising to improve our lives. We are all, sometimes consciously, sometimes unconsciously, affect

Who were the Bohemians and how does their example, often despised and degraded by respectable society, serve as a solution to the problem of status anxiety according to deBotton? Is it possible to be a Bohemian today? If so, what would be the consequences?

As a counselor, Consider what stands out as especially important to you from Counselor Professional Identity, Function, and Ethics.
Do you agree or disagree with the statement,, "Counselors should be like scientists when working with clients, objectively generating hypotheses as to what may be troubling the client and then re

I need help with teen pregnancy and big brother.
If this was your client, what would you say and Do? Be specific. Why would you respond this way.
What is an informed consent form and why is it important?
Segment two: Big Brother
1. if this was your client, what would you say and do?
what are the state legal

The attached classic article by Herbert Gans comments on why poverty exists from a functionalist perspective.
After reading the article, comment on the question of whether or not Western democracies could possibly afford to eliminate poverty.

What's wrong with snobbery anyway? Shouldn't people be proud of their accomplishments and achievements? Aren't some people better than others-- not in the basic human sense, but in every other sense? Before answering this question, please read Bannings' 1931 piece on this very question (it's on the home page) and see if it gi

Sociologist G. William Domhoff of the University of California at Santa Cruz has published an article titled "Wealth, Income, and Power"
http://sociology.ucsc.edu/whorulesamerica/power/wealth.html
The article discusses several important statistics on the distribution of wealth in the United States. Some of the key findings

What are we to make of the phenomenon of "reverse snobbery"? Reverse snobs feel they are better than others because they are "down to earth" and don't "put on airs."
For example, I have a relative (who shall go unnamed), who is an all-star reverse snob. When the family comes over for dinner on Thanksgiving, his wife gets